EBOLA VIRUS

DISEASE Democratic Republic of the Congo

External Situation Report 59

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EBOLA VIRUS

DISEASE

Democratic Republic of the Congo

External Situation Report 59 Date of issue: 17 September 2019 Data as reported by: 15 September 2019 Cases DeathsDeaths 1. Situation update 3129 1002096

In the past week, from 9 to 15 September, 51 new confirmed Ebola virus disease (EVD) cases, with an additional 26 deaths, have been reported from nine health zones in three affected provinces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Throughout the week, localised, minor security incidents have impacted the response, including burial and vaccination activities in Mambasa and Komanda. In addition, there was a major security incident in Lwemba, within Mandima health zone from 14-16 September 2019. The event was in response to the recent death of a local healthcare worker from EVD. Due to the violence and vandalism that occurred during the incident, all activities have been suspended in the area until further notice. In addition to seriously impacting the response activities on the ground, this could lead to gaps or delays in the reporting of new EVD cases in this hotspot area. Overall, these incidents underscore the need for continued and proactive engagement and sensitizing of local communities, especially in the high risk areas that may not currently be affected.

In the 21 days from 26 August to 15 September 2019, 52 health areas in 15 health zones reported new cases, (Table 1, Figure 2). During this period, a total of 149 confirmed cases were reported, with the majority coming from the health zones of Mambasa (19%, n=29), Kalunguta (19%, n=28), Mandima (19%, n=28), and (10%, n=15). Fourteen health zones that have previously reported cases of EVD since the beginning of the outbreak have not reported a case in more than 21 days.

As of 15 September 2019, a total of 3129 EVD cases were reported, including 3018 confirmed and 111 probable cases, of which 2096 cases died (overall case fatality ratio 67%). Of the total confirmed and probable cases with reported sex and age, 56% (1755) were female, 29% (893) were children aged less than 18 years, and 5% (159) were healthcare workers.

Under Pillar 1 of the current Strategic Response Plan, the estimated funding requirement for all partners for the period July to December 2019 is US$ 287 million, including US$ 120-140 million for WHO. As of 17 September 2019, close to US$ 60 million have been received by WHO, with further funds committed or pledged. Currently available funds will close the financing gap up until the end of October 2019. Further resources are needed to fund the response through to December 2019, and WHO is appealing to donors to provide generous support. A summary of funding received by WHO since the start of this outbreak can be found here.

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Figure 1: Confirmed and probable Ebola virus disease cases by week of illness onset, as of 15 September 2019

*Data in recent weeks are subject to delays in case confirmation and reporting, as well as ongoing data cleaning. Table 1: Ebola virus disease cases by classification and health zones in and Ituri provinces, Democratic Republic of the Congo, as of 15 September 2019

Cumulative cases by classification Cumulative deaths Health areas Deaths reporting at least one Confirmed Confirmed Probable Total among Total Province Health Zone case in previous 21 cases in the last cases cases cases confirmed deaths days / Total number 21 days cases of Health Areas South Kivu Mwenga 1/18 6 0 6 3 3 2 Alimbongo 0/20 5 0 5 2 2 0 Beni 7/18 669 9 678 433 442 15 Biena 1/16 17 2 19 12 14 1 3/15 281 3 284 346 349 5 0/10 1 0 1 1 1 0 Kalunguta 7/18 183 17 200 68 85 28 Katwa 5/18 649 23 672 466 489 8 Kayna 2/21 27 0 27 8 8 5 Kyondo 2/22 25 4 29 15 19 5 North Kivu Lubero 0/19 31 2 33 4 6 0 Mabalako 3/12 373 17 390 284 301 4 Manguredjipa 0/10 18 0 18 12 12 0 Masereka 0/16 50 6 56 17 23 0 Musienene 2/20 84 1 85 33 34 3 Mutwanga 2/19 32 0 32 12 12 7 Nyiragongo 0/10 3 0 3 1 1 0 1/26 56 0 56 25 25 1 Pinga 0/18 1 0 1 0 0 0 Vuhovi 0/12 103 14 117 37 51 0 Ariwara 0/21 1 0 1 1 1 0 Bunia 0/20 4 0 4 4 4 0 Komanda 3/15 49 9 58 34 43 8 Lolwa 0/8 3 0 3 1 1 0 Ituri Mambasa 7/17 50 0 50 15 15 29 Mandima 6/15 286 4 290 145 149 28 Nyakunde 0/12 1 0 1 1 1 0 Rwampara 0/13 8 0 8 3 3 0 Tchomia 0/12 2 0 2 2 2 0 Total 51/471 (10.8%) 3018 111 3129 1985 2096 149

Note: Attributions of cases notified in recent days to a health zone are subjected to changes upon in-depth investigations

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Figure 2: Geographical distribution of confirmed and probable Ebola virus disease cases by health area, North Kivu and Ituri provinces, Democratic Republic of the Congo, , 15 September 2019

*Data are subject to delays in case confirmation and reporting, as well as ongoing data cleaning and reclassification – trends during recent weeks should be interpreted cautiously.

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2. Actions to date

The Government and the Ministry of Health (MoH) and other national authorities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, WHO, and partners are implementing outbreak control interventions together with teams in the surrounding provinces, who are taking measures to ensure that they are response-ready.

An overview of key activities is summarized below:

Surveillance and Laboratory

Over 210 000 contacts have been registered to date, and 12 844 are currently under surveillance as of 17 September 2019. On average, 86% of contacts were followed daily in the last seven days in health zones with continued operations.

An average of 2728 alerts were received per day over the past seven days, of which 2626 (96%) were investigated within 24 hours of reporting.

There are eight laboratories with Ebola virus diagnostic capacity operational in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, located in Mambasa, Mangina, Goma, Komanda, Beni, Butembo, Katwa, Bunia, and Kinshasa. All the laboratories are using GeneXpert as the primary diagnostic tool.

A laboratory with the capacity to sequence whole virus genome has been established in Katwa to support virus transmission chain analysis. Sequencing support is also available at the Kinshasa INRB laboratory.

Case management

There are currently nine operational Ebola treatment centres and 20 Ebola transit centres. A new treatment centre is scheduled to open today (15 September 2019) in Mambasa, and a new transit centre opened in .

On 24 November 2018, MoH announced the launch of the Pamoja Tulinde Maisha(PALM) (together saves lives) randomized control trial (RCT) for Ebola therapeutics. On 9 August 2019, the PALM RCT Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) reviewed interim results from the first 499 study participants and recommended the study be stopped. All patients are now being randomized to receive either REGN-EB3 or mAb114 in addition to optimized supportive care (oSOC) in an extended phase protocol.

Patients in all other treatment centres in Democratic Republic of the Congo will also be eligible to receive one of the two treatments, under the Monitored Emergency Use of Unregistered and Investigational Interventions (MEURI) framework in addition to oSOC. Over 750 patients have been enrolled in MEURI thus far.

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Infection prevention and control (IPC) and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)

IPC and WASH activities continue in health facilities and in Ebola-affected communities. Activities in health facilities currently includes, facility assessments, training and briefing health workers on basic and Ebola-specific IPC principles, decontamination when necessary, providing supplies, evaluating adherence to key IPC indicators (e.g., EVD screening, PPE availability, isolation, and referral), developing improvement action plans based on gaps identified and followed-up by supportive supervision and mentorship. Increasing engagement with IPC implementing partners working in both healthcare facilities and the community is being prioritized.

Training on the recently finalized National IPC/WASH package will be rolled out this week in Goma (18- 21 September, 2019) and then followed at the sub-commission level for IPC supervisors, implementing partners, and facility-based IPC focal persons. The National IPC/WASH package will help strengthen the quality of IPC/WASH interventions throughout the Ebola Response as well as address nosocomial infections, through standardization of expectations, tools, and best practices. A crosswalk highlighting updates and changes contained in the package has been finalized.

From 1 January 2019 through 15 September 2019, 14% (360/2521) of EVD infections are thought to represent possible nosocomial infection (NI). Throughout this period, Katwa Health Zone (HZ) reported the highest number of possible NI (31%; 110/360). During this same period, 105 healthcare worker (HCW) infections were reported – 4% of total infections (105/2521). Overall, Katwa HZ has reported the majority of HCW infections (31%: 33/105).

Points of Entry (PoE)

During the week ending 15 September 2019, 2 562 674 screenings were performed, bringing the cumulative total to over 96 million screenings. This week, a total of 141 alerts were notified, of which 47 were validated as suspect following investigation, with no confirmed case. This brings the cumulative number of alerts to 2765 with 1228 validated as suspect, and 26 subsequently confirmed with EVD following laboratory testing. An average of 109 PoEs and PoCs reported screenings daily this week, out of 117 functioning points (93%).

WHO has supported the revision of data collection to integrate contact tracking activities as well as holding discussions with Congolese technology researchers to explore innovative ways to track missing and displaced contacts.

The preparation of joint cross border missions with Democratic Republic of the Congo and three priority countries (South Sudan, Burundi and Uganda) for the development of joint cross border road maps is underway. From Democratic Republic of the Congo, three different teams, each including one individual from MOH, one from WHO and one from IOM, are being formed.

IOM supported strengthening of surveillance and Risk Communication and Community Engagement in Mambasa, and participated in a joint assessment mission with PHNF and partners to design targeted support for surveillance in the axis linking Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan and Uganda.

South Sudan Active screening is ongoing in 15 active IOM-supported PoE sites. During the reporting period, 22 313 inbound travellers to South Sudan were screened for EVD exposure and symptoms, with no suspected or alert cases.

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The IOM South Sudan EVD weekly report (week 36) is available at the following link

Uganda IOM organized a monitoring and mentorship mission with MOH, UN agencies and partners to prioritize PoEs to scale up risk communication initiatives and started distributions of IPC and PPE supplies in 8 South Western districts.

IOM is organizing a Uganda-Democratic Republic of the Congo cross border meeting scheduled for 25- 26 September 2019 in Kampala, Uganda with Ministries of Health, UN agencies and partner organizations expected to attend.

Safe and Dignified Burials (SDB)

As of 16 September 2019, there have been a total of 12 823 SDB alerts notified through the Red Cross SDB database, of which 10 399 (81%) were responded to successfully by Red Cross and Civil Protection SDB teams and community harm reduction burial teams.

During the week ending 16 September 2019, there were 532 SDB alerts recorded in 26 health zones. Of these, 463 (87%) were responded to successfully. During this period, alerts were distributed as follows (all ZS accounting for 5% of more of SDB alerts):

ZS % alerts Goma 12% Beni 11% Bunia 10%

Katwa 9%

Rutshuru 7%

Mabalako 5% Mandima 5% Butembo 5% Oicha 5% Mutwanga 5%

Health zones falling above and below the 70% success benchmark:

≥ 70% success < 70% success Katwa, Rutshuru, Masereka, Alimbongo, Murambi, Bunia, Nyiragongo, Mutwanga, Manguredjipa, Butembo, Oicha, Kayna, Rwampara, Beni, Vuhovi, Kyondo, Kalunguta, Mambasa, Nyankunde Mandima, Mabalako, Musienene, Goma, Lubero, Komanda, , Biena

Implementation of ring vaccination protocol

As of 16 September 2019, 222 415 people at risk have consented to and received the rVSV-ZEBOV-GP Ebola vaccine. Of those, 55 010 are contacts and 152 945 contacts-of-contacts. The total number of vaccines includes 45 999 HCWs/FLWs, 72 289 children 1-17 years of age, 1 163 children under one year of age, 804 pregnant women and 4 024 lactating mothers.

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Risk communication, social mobilization and community engagement

During week 37:

In Butembo a dialogue was held with community leaders and transit agency officials to reinforce their commitment to strict adherence to prevention measures in the community, including points of entry and WASH measures; In Mutwanga, the Ruwenzori Sector Chief appealed for the community to collaborate with response teams and compliance with hygiene measures; In Mwenga, 63 local leaders, school authorities and women’s association members from Kalambi health area were briefed on EVD and community engagement.

Operational partnerships

Under the overall leadership of the Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in support of the Ministry of Health, WHO is supporting public health operations and regional preparedness as outlined in the Strategic Response Plan. WHO is working intensively with wide- ranging, multisectoral and multidisciplinary national, regional and global partners and stakeholders for EVD response, research and preparedness.

Various international organizations and UN agencies, specialized agencies and non-governmental organizations are involved in response and preparedness activities; the organizations and their specific contributions have been previously reported.

WHO continues to engage the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN), Emerging and Dangerous Pathogens Laboratory Network (EDPLN), Emerging Disease Clinical Assessment and Response Network (EDCARN), and the Emergency Medical Team (EMT) initiative – as well as regional operational partners and collaboration centres in Africa – to deploy experts and multidisciplinary teams for the response, and to support intensive preparedness and readiness activities in neighbouring and at-risk countries.

WHO encourages wider coverage of partner operations via this report in response to demand from our planning teams. If you would like to see the activities of your agency or organization appears in the report, please send an email to [email protected].

SONAR-global conducted an exercise “Mapping social sciences research for the Ebola response in Democratic Republic of the Congo and neighbouring countries.” See link: http://sonar-global.eu/mapping-social-sciences- research-for-the-ebola-response-in-drc-and-neighboring-countries/

IHR travel measures and cross border health

WHO advises against any restriction of travel to, and trade with, the Democratic Republic of the Congo based on the currently available information. There is currently no licensed vaccine to protect people from the Ebola virus. Therefore, any requirements for certificates of Ebola vaccination are not a reasonable basis for restricting movement across borders or the issuance of visas for travellers to/from the affected countries. WHO continues to closely monitor and, if necessary, verify travel and trade measures in relation to this event. Currently, no country has implemented travel measures that significantly interfere with international traffic to and from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Travellers should seek medical advice before travel and should practice good hygiene. Further information is available in the WHO recommendations for international traffic related to the Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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In order to monitor the travel and trade situation around this event, a new dashboard Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: Travel and trade health measures has been established. The dashboard can also be accessed from Strategic Partnership for International Health Regulations (2005) and Health Security (SPH) page under ‘Resources’ tab, and then click on “IHR Travel and Trade Measures” tab. The dashboard shows all countries where WHO is aware that travel and trade measures have been implemented, and the type of measure, and will be updated as and when any measure is confirmed to be in place.

3. Conclusion

The recent security incidents that have impacted EVD response activities and stalled response activities in Mandima underscore the susceptibility of the outbreak response to interruptions. Since Mandima is one of the current hotspots for the outbreak, we can expect a rise in cases in the coming weeks due to the disruption of response activities, including contact tracing and vaccination activities. However, fourteen health zones that have previously reported cases of EVD since the beginning of the outbreak have not reported a case in more than 21 days, showing that strict implementation of proven public health measures gives results. Local, national and international authorities and all partners need to keep up the momentum in responding to this protracted outbreak in order to build on the gains so far and bring it to a close.

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